What's the difference between grice and trice?

Grice


Definition:

  • (pl. ) of Gree
  • (n.) A little pig.
  • (n.) See Gree, a step.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) The statistics office's chief economist Joe Grice said the bigger picture in Wednesday's GDP data is that the UK economy, in volume terms, was flat between January and March compared with the same period last year.
  • (2) Joe Grice, chief economist at the UK's Office for National Statistics, is always chiding journalists for not loooking at the long term trend in GDP data, and maybe we need to take the same healthy scepticism to today's figures from Japan 9.03am BST Telecoms giants enter tariff battle Bloomberg is reporting that Nokia and Ericsson have told the EU to drop a probe into unfair subsidies for Chinese phone makers.
  • (3) Varising osteotomy of the calcaneum offers the advantage of avoiding sacrifice of the calcaneo-talar joint, as in the Grice-Green arthrodesis, which although indicated for the paralytic valgus flat foot, is not appropriate in the idiopathic variety.
  • (4) After predictable failure of a Grice procedure, a persisting good correction was obtained by fibula lengthening combined with talus reposition and fixation on os calcis.
  • (5) Grice-OP is able to prevent severe deformities but it is often followed by a subtalar arthrodesis after growth arrest.
  • (6) This study reports the results of a computerized baropodometric analysis of the function of primary valgus pronated flat foot submitted to talocalcanear arthrodesis according to the Grice-Green method (Grice, 1952; 1955) as modified by Vigliani et al., (1978).
  • (7) Joe Grice, chief economist at the ONS, said: “These figures - rising employment and falling unemployment and inactivity – continue the strong trend in the labour market that has been seen in recent months.
  • (8) A retrospective review was done of 19 poliomyelitis feet on which the standard Grice subtalar arthrodesis was performed for correction of valgus feet deformity.
  • (9) 9.40am BST Photograph: Sky News Joe Grice, the head of the ONS, is refusing to make any predictions for how the UK economy may fare in the months ahead.
  • (10) 9.35am GMT The recovery has been somewhat erratic, says Joe Grice, but it "feels like the economy now has a better tone".
  • (11) Lumbar segmental coupled motion categories according to the scheme of Cassidy and Grice, as well as a modified scheme.
  • (12) UK economic growth accelerated to 0.6% before Brexit vote – live updates Read more Joe Grice, chief economist at the ONS , said there was little evidence that concern about a possible Brexit vote had a negative impact on the economy before the referendum.
  • (13) The pseudarthrosis rate was 41 per cent, which is considerably higher than that reported for the Grice extra-articular arthrodesis.
  • (14) The best results were obtained with early subtalar arthrodesis (Grice) and biplanar K wire fixation.
  • (15) The results of the Grice extra-articular subtalar arthrodesis were evaluated in 102 feet of 60 ambulatory patients with spasticity at an average of five years postoperatively.
  • (16) A retrospective review of 45 patients (62 feet) who had undergone a Grice subtalar arthrodesis and who had reached skeletal maturity was undertaken.
  • (17) Confirming the new measure recently, ONS chief economic adviser Joe Grice said: While it’s right that GDP plays a central role in monetary and fiscal policy, it has long been recognised as presenting an incomplete picture of how our society is doing.
  • (18) A case presentation involving complications resulting from errors in surgical technique with the Grice-Green procedure is discussed in this report.
  • (19) 10.17am BST And here's what a bumpy, shallow recovery looks like ( via the Guardian's Datablog ) Photograph: Datablog 10.10am BST ONS: Britain's bumpy and shallow recovery The ONS's chief economist Joe Grice said the 0.3 per cent growth registered from January to the end of March fitted the pattern in recent years.
  • (20) Grice declined to say when UK workers might finally see wages rising in real terms, but did point out that inflation has recently fallen.

Trice


Definition:

  • (v. t.) To pull; to haul; to drag; to pull away.
  • (v. t.) To haul and tie up by means of a rope.
  • (n.) A very short time; an instant; a moment; -- now used only in the phrase in a trice.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) Metformin 0.5 g trice daily or placebo were given for 4 weeks.
  • (2) This dorsal approach, easy to perform, ensures in a trice the "resting position" of the thumb and the articular congruity.
  • (3) meter disposable dialyzers and a dialysis strategy of 3 hours every other day or 4 hours trice weekly have been presented.
  • (4) In Groups B, C, D, G, H and I, the wound was painted trice weekly with a 0.5% solution of Trp-P-2 in DMSO for 8 weeks.
  • (5) This is the kind of creative accounting that could end the deficit in a trice.)
  • (6) Soaring inflation could and would destroy that link in a trice.
  • (7) In Groups A and F, the wound was painted trice weekly with DMSO (dimethyl sulfoxide) for 8 weeks.
  • (8) He was treated with bicarbonated hemodialysis trice weekly.
  • (9) I lope into Café Rui and in a trice they've laid me a place and grilled me some fat small sardines, and found a handful of small squid, which they fry in good oil with cloves of golden garlic.
  • (10) Bank regulation has been kicked into 2019 – political neverland: in a trice the entire NHS is put up for tender to "any qualified provider" , but banks get seven years to "prepare" while they lobby against already weak reforms.
  • (11) Don't look for consistency, either: MacMillan could veer between genius, excess and claptrap in a trice – and deciding which is which still divides opinion to this day.
  • (12) To determine the effect of a recombinant alpha interferon 2b (Intron-A) and possible benefit of prednisolone pretreatment in chronic non-A, non-B hepatitis, 75 Chinese patients with clinico-histologically proven chronic hepatitis were randomly allocated to one of the following regimens: (A) 3 million units of Intron-A trice weekly for 6 months; (B) dose titration according to ALT-AST values; (C) prednisolone withdrawal followed by regimen A; (D) control group: no treatment for 6 months but followed by alternating treatment with 3 million units of Intron-A trice weekly for 2 weeks followed by 2 weeks no treatment for 6 months.
  • (13) And Jill Abramson , executive editor of the New York Times , was out in a trice, too – sacked, brushed away, her name erased from the paper's masthead with a ruthlessness Kim Jong-Il might have envied.

Words possibly related to "grice"